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         Pearson Egon:     more books (15)

21. Pearson_Egon
Biography of egon pearson (18951980) egon pearson s father was Karl pearson,whose biography is given in this archive, and his mother was Maria Sharpe.
http://www-groups.dcs.st-and.ac.uk/~history/Mathematicians/Pearson_Egon.html
Egon Sharpe Pearson
Born: 11 Aug 1895 in Hampstead (near London), England
Died: 12 June 1980 in Midhurst, Sussex, England
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Egon Pearson 's father was Karl Pearson , whose biography is given in this archive, and his mother was Maria Sharpe. Egon was the middle child of three in the family; Sigrid Loetitia was three years older and Helga Sharpe three years younger than Egon. Even as a child at the age of five he was aware of his father's work and his efforts to bring the journal Biometrika into existence. Later in life Egon recalled creating his own journal as a five years old:- ... which was all scrawls with chalk. He attended school, first at Dragon School Oxford from 1907 to 1909, then going to Winchester College from which he graduated in 1914. He had been accepted to study at Trinity College Cambridge in June of that year. World War I began in 1914 before he was due to matriculate at Cambridge, and had Pearson's health been good he would have found himself in military service. However, his health had never been good as a child and he had a heart murmur which now prevented him from enlisting. He therefore went to Trinity College, Cambridge, to begin his university studies. These studies were interrupted by influenza which hit him hard and he was unable to study from August 1914 until the end of that year. At the end of one year of study, Pearson left Cambridge in 1915 determined to make a contribution to the war effort, and he worked for the Admiralty and the Ministry of Shipping.

22. Pearson
Their marriage in 1890 produced three children; egon pearson (born 1895) who followed His son egon pearson became head of the Department of Statistics,
http://www-groups.dcs.st-and.ac.uk/~history/Mathematicians/Pearson.html
Karl Pearson
Born: 27 March 1857 in London, England
Died: 27 April 1936 in Coldharbour, Surrey, England
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Karl Pearson 's mother Fanny Smith and his father William Pearson were both from Yorkshire families. William was a barrister of the Inner Temple [26]:- He was a man of great ability, with exceptional mental and physical energy and a keen interest in historical research, traits which his son also exhibited. William and Fanny named their second child Carl and he used this name until he was about 23 years old when he changed the spelling to Karl. In this article we shall refer to him either as Karl or as Pearson. Karl, together with his one older brother and one younger sister, were brought up in an upper-middle class family. After being educated at home up to the age of nine years, he was sent to University College School, London. He studied there until he was sixteen, but he was then forced to leave due to illness. A private tutor was engaged to teach him at home and he took the Cambridge Scholarship Examinations in 1875 and, coming second in the examinations, he won a scholarship to King's College. At Cambridge he was taught by Stokes Maxwell Cayley and Burnside . His coach was perhaps the most famous of all the Cambridge coaches, namely

23. Egon Pearson
agosto 1895 a Hampstead (presso Londra) e morì il 12 giugno 1980 a Midhurst
http://encyclopedie-it.snyke.com/articles/egon_pearson.html
Egon Pearson
Egon Sharpe Pearson , ¨ nato l' 11 agosto a Hampstead (presso Londra ) e mor¬ il 12 giugno a Midhurst ( Sussex ˆ stato un importante statistico , figlio di un ancora pi¹ celebre statistico: Karl Pearson e di Maria Sharpe, con una sorella di tre anni maggiore (Sigrid Loetitia) e una di tre anni minore (Helga Sharpe). Frequenta prima la Dragon School Oxford (dal 1907 al 1909) e poi il Winchester College dove consegu¬ il graduate nel 1914. Nel grazie a problemi di salute (anche al cuore) evita il reclutamento per la Prima Guerra Mondiale e comincia lo studio della matematica al Trinity College di Cambridge ma a causa di un'influenza non riesce a studiare fino alla fine dell'anno accademico. Dopo questo primo anno lascia il Trinity College per lavorare all'Ammiragliato e al Ministero della navigazione. Nel , conseguito il first degree , si interessa di astronomia in particolare di fisica solare, ma si rivolge alla statistica in seguito ai corsi sulla teoria degli errori. Dal 1921 lavora presso il dipartimento di statistica applicata dell' University College di Londra (dipartimento fondato da suo padre nel Nel diventa assistant editor di Biometrika Il ¨ l'anno di svolta, in quanto grazie al

24. APPUNTI TESINE
Translate this page Vedi anche * Statistica * Jerzy Neyman * University College di Londra, Biometrikapearson, egon pearson, egon. invia la pagina ad un tuo amico
http://www.matura.it/enciclopedia/egon_pearson.htm
Home Scuola Università Forum ... Gioca e vinci document.title = "Egon Pearson" + " - " + document.title Home scuola > Egon Pearson Egon Pearson Egon Sharpe Pearson
¨ nato l'11 agosto 1895 a Hampstead (presso Londra)
e mor¬ il 12 giugno 1980 a Midhurst (Sussex).
ˆ stato un importante statistico, figlio di un ancora pi¹ celebre statistico: Karl Pearson e di Maria Sharpe, con una sorella di tre anni maggiore (Sigrid Loetitia) e una di tre anni minore (Helga Sharpe).
Frequenta prima la Dragon School Oxford (dal 1907 al 1909) e poi il Winchester College dove consegu¬ il graduate nel 1914.
Nel 1914 grazie a problemi di salute (anche al cuore) evita il reclutamento per la Prima Guerra Mondiale e comincia lo studio della matematica al Trinity College di Cambridge ma a causa di un'influenza non riesce a studiare fino alla fine dell'anno accademico.
Dopo questo primo anno lascia il Trinity College per lavorare all'Ammiragliato e al Ministero della navigazione.
Nel 1919, conseguito il first degree , si interessa di astronomia in particolare di fisica solare, ma si rivolge alla statistica in seguito ai corsi sulla teoria degli errori.
Dal 1921 lavora presso il dipartimento di statistica applicata dell'University College di Londra (dipartimento fondato da suo padre nel 1911).

25. BibScout - Pearson, Egon Sharpe
pearson, egon Sharpe pearson, egon Sharpe. Schlagworte. Diese Seite drucken Seite drucken
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Mathematik Gesammelte Werke Autoren P Pearson, Egon Sharpe BibScout Autoren A Autoren B Autoren C Autoren D ... Medizin
Pearson, Egon Sharpe
Document Actions Regensburger Verbundklassifikation SF.6540 SF 6540
  • A selection of early statistical papers of J. Neyman
    / Jerzy Neyman. - Berkeley, Calif. : Univ. of Calif. Pr., 1967 Bibliotheken Joint statistical papers
    / Jerzy Neyman. - Cambridge : Univ.Pr., 1967 Bibliotheken
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26. Kohler Biographies
BIOGRAPHY 13.3 egon S. pearson (1895 1980). egon Sharpe pearson was born inLondon, England, the son of Karl pearson (Biography 14.1). egon was educated at
http://www.swlearning.com/quant/kohler/stat/biographical_sketches/bio13.3.html
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BIOGRAPHY 13.3 Egon S. Pearson
Egon Sharpe Pearson was born in London, England, the son of Karl Pearson (Biography 14.1). Egon was educated at Cambridge University and closely followed in his father's footsteps. Early on, he joined his father's department at University College, London. In 1933, when his father resigned, he took over one of the two new positions created as replacements, the other one going to R. A. Fisher (Biography 13.1). In this position, and as editor of Biometrika , he contributed importantly to statistics (he himself published some 133 papers). Above all, he is known, along with Jerzy Neyman (Biography 13.2) as the developer of the modem theory of hypothesis testing (as it is found in text Chapter 13). The Neyman-Pearson approach differed considerably from Fisher's and this difference gave rise to a lifelong and bitter controversy. Unlike Fisher who viewed hypothesis testing as a procedure by which a researcher could form an opinion about some population parameter, Neyman-Pearson viewed it as a means by which a decision maker operating under uncertainty could make a clear choice between two alternatives, while at the same time controlling the chances for error (and minimizing costs associated therewith).

27. Pearson,Egon Sharpe
The summary for this Chinese (Traditional) page contains characters that cannot be correctly displayed in this language/character set.
http://www.ntpu.edu.tw/stat/learning/people/pearson_egon.htm
Pearson,Egon,­^°êªº¼Æ²z²Î­p¾Ç®a¡A¬O Pearson Karl Neyman ¦b¾Ç³N¤W¦@¦P¬ã¨s¡A¦Ó«á¡A¦³¤F Neyman-Pearson lemma ©M«á¨Óªº hypothesis testing µ¥µo®i¡C

28. ¤j®v¤¶²Ð
pearson,egon Sharpe (18951980), Cox,Gertrude Mary Cox,Gertrude Mary (1900-1978),Kolmogorov,Andrey Nikolaevich Kolmogorov,Andrey Nikolaevich (1903-1987)
http://www.ntpu.edu.tw/stat/learning/people.htm
Pearson,Karl
Gossett,William Sealy
Paul Levy
Sir Ronald Aylmer Fisher
Cramer, Carl Harald
Neyman,Jerzy
Pearson,Egon Sharpe
Cox,Gertrude Mary
Kolmogorov,Andrey Nikolaevich
Tukey,John Wilder
Feller,William Cochran,William Gemmell Bayes,Reverend Thomas Blackwell, David (Harold) Bernoulli, Jacob (Jacques) Boole,George Bonferroni,Carlo Emilio Markov, Andrei Andreevich Deming, William Edwards Gibbs, Josiah Willard Weibull,Wallodi Abbe,Ernst Carl Akaike, Hirotugu Anderson, Theodore Wilbur ¥»ºô­¶²Î­p¤Hª«¸ê®Æ¡A¥D­n°Ñ¦Ò A dictionary of Statistics , Oxford ²Î­p¡A§ïÅܤF¥@¬É,¤Ñ¤U http://www-gap.dcs.st-and.ac.uk/

29. R.A. Fisher - Calendar Of Correspondence With Egon S. Pearson
Calendar of Correspondence with egon S. pearson (University College London) June1930 November 1947. 2 cm. 1930. 25 June 1930, 3 December 1930,
http://www.library.adelaide.edu.au/digitised/fisher/corres/pearsones/
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Correspondence of Sir R.A. Fisher
Calendar of Correspondence with Egon S. Pearson (University College London)
June 1930 - November 1947. 2 cm.
25 June 1930 3 December 1930 9 December 1930 10 March 1932 ... 7 June 1945
[File includes copies of four letters between Pearson and Joan Box, Fisher's daughter, January-April 1979, with extensive notes on Fisher's theoretical differences with Neyman, Haldane and Karl Pearson] Return to list of correspondents
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30. R.A. Fisher - Calendar Of Correspondence With Karl Pearson
Note selections from the correspondence between pearson, Fisher and WS Gossetwas published by egon pearson in Biometrika (1968) 55, 445457
http://www.library.adelaide.edu.au/digitised/fisher/corres/pearsonk/
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Correspondence of Sir R.A. Fisher
Calendar of Correspondence with Karl Pearson (University College London)
September 1914 - February 1936. 1 cm.
18 October 1933
23 October 1933 22 January 1934 28 February 1934 ... 30 August 1935
[Note: selections from the correspondence between Pearson, Fisher and W.S. Gosset was published by Egon Pearson in Biometrika Return to list of correspondents
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31. On The Intellectual Versatility Of Karl Pearson By Richard H. Williams, Bruno D.
egon pearson joined his father in welcoming the Neymans. “…Karl pearson and egonpearson, and what was the name of egon’s sister Sigridoh they all were
http://human-nature.com/nibbs/03/kpearson.html
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URL of this document http://human-nature.com/nibbs/03/kpearson.html

32. Statisticians In History
egon pearson. egon S. pearson 18951980. Click here for article from 2004 AmstatNews Special Issue printer friendly page top of page
http://www.amstat.org/about/statisticians/index.cfm?fuseaction=biosinfo&BioID=24

33. HTML Translation Of SGML/EAD Document By Tim Green
egon S pearson, 5 letters, 19711972. MG Kendall, 7 letters, 1965-1977. Brig GBomford, 1 letter, 1963. The letters are mainly concerned with publications
http://library-2.lse.ac.uk/archives/handlists/CollMisc1111/m.html
British Library of Political and Economic Science
COLL MISC 1111
Sheynin, Oscar, fl 1963 1977, statistician
Extent: 1 file
Biographical History
Scope and Content
Letters to Oscar Sheynin from: Egon S Pearson, 5 letters, 1971-1972 MG Kendall, 7 letters, 1965-1977 Brig G Bomford, 1 letter, 1963 The letters are mainly concerned with publications by the correspondents,particularly articles and reviews by Sheynin, Pearson and Kendall in the journal 'Biometrika'.
Arrangement
1 file
Access: OPEN
  • SHEYNIN OSCAR FL 1963 1977 STATISTICIAN PEARSON EGON SHARPE 1895 1980 STATISTICIAN KENDALL SIR MAURICE GEORGE 1907 1983 STATISTICIAN BOMFORD G FL 1963 STATISTICS

34. E. S. Pearson's Reviews Of Fisher's Statistical Methods
egon Sharpe pearson reviewed the first two editions of RA Fisher’s Statistical First Edition When he reviewed the 1st edition in 1926 egon pearson
http://www.economics.soton.ac.uk/staff/aldrich/fisherguide/esp.htm
E. S. Pearson's reviews of R. A. Fisher’s Statistical Methods for Research Workers
Introduction
Egon Sharpe Pearson reviewed the first two editions of R. A. Fisher’s Statistical Methods for Research Workers . Fisher replied to the first review and eventually to the second, though only after their common friend, W. S. Gosset (“Student”), tried unsuccessfully to appease him. The reviews and the ensuing published letters are reproduced here with links to Fisher’s book and to one of his papers. The private letters, which are an important part of the human story, are not included here (see below). First Edition: When he reviewed the 1 st edition in 1926 Egon Pearson (1895-1980) was a lecturer of only a few years standing in his father’s ( Karl Pearson distribution that KP had introduced. In his reply—ESP’s review was the only one to elicit a response—Fisher explained his position on the correlation ratio. Second Edition: This exchange from 1929 is more interesting as it brings out the attitudes of Fisher, Pearson and Student (

35. Karl Pearson: A Reader's Guide (Main Document)
egon S. pearson (1936/8) Karl pearson An Appreciation of Some Aspects of hisLife and Work, In Two Parts, Biometrika, 28, 193257, 29, 161-247.
http://www.economics.soton.ac.uk/staff/aldrich/main.htm
Karl Pearson: A Reader’s Guide Go to FRONT page Print the legend! [The first thing Pearson could remember] was sitting in a high chair sucking his thumb. Someone told him to stop sucking it, and added that unless he did so, the thumb would wither away. He put his two thumbs together and looked at them for a long time. “They look alike to me,” he said to himself. “I can’t see that the thumb I suck is any smaller than the other. I wonder if she could be lying to me.” Here in this simple story we have rejection of constituted authority, faith in his own interpretation of the meaning of observed data, and finally, imputation of moral obliquity to a person whose judgement differed from his own. These characteristics were prominent throughout his entire career. W a l k ... er Biographical Sketch Photos of KP in with G a lton of W e l d ... r Karl Pearson was born in London on March 27 th 1857 into an upper-middle class family, his father a barrister. He read mathematics at Cambridge University, where M a xw e ... y and Stokes were the luminaries. He had the best of coaches

36. Karl Pearson -- Facts, Info, And Encyclopedia Article
The son, (Click link for more info and facts about egon Sharpe pearson) egonSharpe pearson, succeeded him as head of the Applied Statistics Department at
http://www.absoluteastronomy.com/encyclopedia/k/ka/karl_pearson.htm
Karl Pearson
[Categories: Eugenicists, British mathematicians, Statisticians, 1936 deaths, 1857 births]
Karl Pearson (A branch of applied mathematics concerned with the collection and interpretation of quantitative data and the use of probability theory to estimate population parameters) statistics as a serious scientific discipline in its own right. He founded the Department of Applied Statistics at (Click link for more info and facts about University College London) University College London in 1911; it was the first (Establishment where a seat of higher learning is housed, including administrative and living quarters as well as facilities for research and teaching) university statistics department in the world.
Biography
Karl Pearson was born in London on the 27th March, 1857. He was educated privately at University College School, after which he went to (Click link for more info and facts about King's College, Cambridge) King's College, Cambridge to study mathematics. He then spent part of 1879 and 1880 studying medieval and 16th-century (Click link for more info and facts about German literature) German literature at the universities of (Capital of Germany located in eastern Germany) Berlin and (Click link for more info and facts about Heidelberg) Heidelberg (A university in England) Cambridge University
His next career move was to (Click link for more info and facts about Lincoln's Inn) Lincoln's Inn , where he read (The collection of rules imposed by authority) law until 1881 (although he never practised).

37. UCL Library Services -- Special Collections Library
egon Sharpe pearson Papers. 30 boxes c19101979, of egon Sharpepearson (1895-1980), Professor of Statistics, UCL 1935-1960, and son of Karl pearson.
http://www.ucl.ac.uk/Library/special-coll/epearson.shtml
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Information about Library sites Who's who Other libraries Services ... Subject resources Egon Sharpe Pearson Papers 30 boxes Correspondence, professional and personal papers, c1910-1979, of Egon Sharpe Pearson (1895-1980), Professor of Statistics, UCL 1935-1960, and son of Karl Pearson (The collection remains uncatalogued and closed Last modified 8 June 2004 University College London - Gower Street - London - WC1E 6BT -

38. UCL Library Services: Special Collections Digital Image Collection Results Page
Maria Sharpe pearson and her son egon Date Unknown Library referencepearson PAPERS 1. Title Maria Sharpe pearson Son Creator Unknown......
http://www.ucl.ac.uk/ls/specdig/science1.php?page=9&sort=Creator01

39. Acquiring Statistics | W S Gosset
I have heard from all sources that egon pearson is really a prince of a fellow . egon pearson to a certain extent rephrased the question which Gosset had
http://www.umass.edu/wsp/statistics/tales/gosset.html
Tales of Statisticians
William S Gosset
13 June 1876 - 16 Oct 1937 Gosset earned a degree in chemistry at Oxford, and joined the Guinness brewery firm in 1899. His work for Guinness led him investigate the statistical validity of results obtained from small samples (previous statistical theory had concentrated instead on large samples). He took a leave of absence to spend 1906/1907 studying under Karl Pearson at University College, London. His publications in Pearson's journal Biometrika were signed "Student," not because of a Guinness company policy forbidding publication, as is often said, but more precisely because of a company wish to keep secret the fact that they were gaining an industrial advantage from employing statisticians. Gosset's most important result is known as the "Student's t" test or distribution, published in 1908. In these pages, we will drop the subterfuge and restore the discoverer's name to the discovery. We will call it "Gosset's t." His work founded the concept of quality control, which Neyman and others were later to develop more fully. In studying the distribution of yeast cells, he independently discovered the

40. Acquiring Statistics | Jerzy Neyman
He wrote several papers jointly with egon pearson, one of them relevant to the He went to England in 1934, where egon pearson had succeeded to his
http://www.umass.edu/wsp/statistics/tales/neyman.html
Tales of Statisticians
Jerzy Neyman
16 Apr 1894 - 5 Aug 1981 Jerzy (Polish for "George") Neyman was born in what presently became a part of Russia, and received his PhD in Warsaw. His early teaching was in the areas of mathematics and statistics. He did not invent, but was an early advocate of, random rather than representative sampling, a position that is now generally accepted. He went to England in 1926 to work with the statistician Karl Pearson, whose writings (especially the book The Grammar of Science) had been an early inspiration, but was disappointed to find him unacquainted with modern mathematics. Neyman pursued other interests in Paris (1927), attending the lectures of Lebesgue and Borel. While still there his interest in statistics was renewed by an encounter with Karl Pearson's son Egon, also then in Paris, who was trying to find a general principle from which Gosset's ("Student's") t test could be derived. Neyman returned to Warsaw in 1927, and with American funding set up a biometric laboratory, which came into existence as the Nencki Institute in 1928. He wrote several papers jointly with Egon Pearson, one of them relevant to the Gosset Problem, and the

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